| Literature DB >> 24391567 |
Mariska E Kret1, Karin Roelofs2, Jeroen J Stekelenburg3, Beatrice de Gelder4.
Abstract
We receive emotional signals from different sources, including the face, the whole body, and the natural scene. Previous research has shown the importance of context provided by the whole body and the scene on the recognition of facial expressions. This study measured physiological responses to face-body-scene combinations. Participants freely viewed emotionally congruent and incongruent face-body and body-scene pairs whilst eye fixations, pupil-size, and electromyography (EMG) responses were recorded. Participants attended more to angry and fearful vs. happy or neutral cues, independent of the source and relatively independent from whether the face body and body scene combinations were emotionally congruent or not. Moreover, angry faces combined with angry bodies and angry bodies viewed in aggressive social scenes elicited greatest pupil dilation. Participants' face expressions matched the valence of the stimuli but when face-body compounds were shown, the observed facial expression influenced EMG responses more than the posture. Together, our results show that the perception of emotional signals from faces, bodies and scenes depends on the natural context, but when threatening cues are presented, these threats attract attention, induce arousal, and evoke congruent facial reactions.Entities:
Keywords: body expressions; context; electromyography; emotion; face expressions; fixations; pupil dilation
Year: 2013 PMID: 24391567 PMCID: PMC3866922 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Experiment 1. Passive viewing of face - bodiy pairs (A) Stimulus examples (B) Fixation duration on bodies (body ROI) was mainly influenced by the body expression. Angry expressions induced longest fixations. (C) Fixation duration on bodies (body ROI) below happy faces were longer when the bodies expressed fear or anger, than when they expressed happiness. (D) Fixation duration on faces (face ROI) with congruent body expressions showed that angry faces were longer looked at than happy faces. (E) Corrugator responded to angry and fearful faces, independent of the body posture (F) Pupil-size was largest when observing anger simultaneously from the face and from the body. The error bars represent the mean standard error. ×p < 0.1; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.005.
Electromyography.
| Anger | Anger | 106.520 | 2.477 | 99.415 | 0.955 |
| Happy | 106.336 | 2.402 | 98.672 | 1.223 | |
| Fear | 111.678 | 4.836 | 98.916 | 1.285 | |
| Happy | Anger | 109.806 | 3.147 | 100.933 | 1.606 |
| Happy | 109.630 | 2.653 | 97.770 | 0.877 | |
| Fear | 110.976 | 7.288 | 101.136 | 1.228 | |
| Fear | Anger | 110.472 | 6.674 | 101.468 | 1.462 |
| Happy | 113.608 | 6.371 | 96.173 | 1.494 | |
| Fear | 109.965 | 5.457 | 100.355 | 1.252 | |
Fixation duration.
| Anger | Anger | 0.408 | 0.027 | Anger | 0.062 | 0.004 |
| Happy | 0.406 | 0.025 | Happy | 0.061 | 0.005 | |
| Neutral | 0.429 | 0.026 | Neutral | 0.054 | 0.005 | |
| Happy | Anger | 0.410 | 0.024 | |||
| Happy | 0.399 | 0.027 | ||||
| Neutral | 0.379 | 0.026 | ||||
Figure 2Experiment 2. Passive viewing of bodies in social scenes. (A) The two heat-maps show that participants fixated on the people in the scene. (B) Participants' pupils dilated mostly in response to angry cues, both from the body and from the scene (C). (D) In contrast, the corrugator exclusively responded to angry scenes, not angry bodies. (E) Similarly, the zygomaticus responded to happy scenes and was unresponsive to body expressions. *p < 0.05; ***p < 0.005.